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Date set for 2014 First-Year Player Draft

Date set for 2014 First-Year Player Draft

The summer season for amateur baseball players, most notably those eligible for the 2014 First-Year Player Draft, has come to a close. Now the scouting departments of all 30 teams know exactly when they'll be able to put those evaluations -- along with the information they collect in the spring -- into use.

Major League Baseball announced on Thursday that the 2014 Draft will begin on June 5. The typical format for the Draft would have the opening two rounds on that Thursday, rounds 3-10 on Friday and the remaining 30 rounds coming on Saturday.

2014 draft order

This would be the Draft order if the season ended now* (based on the standings entering Aug. 29):

Pick

Team

W

L

PCT

1

Astros

44

88

0.333

2

Marlins

49

82

0.374

3

Cubs

56

77

0.421

4

White Sox

56

76

0.424

5

Twins

57

74

0.435

6

Brewers

58

74

0.439

7

Giants

59

74

0.444

8

Mariners

59

73

0.447

9

Blue Jays

60

74

0.448

10

Mets

59

72

0.450

11

Blue Jays**

12

Angels

59

72

0.450

13

Padres

60

73

0.451

14

Phillies

61

72

0.459

15

Rockies

63

72

0.467

16

Nationals

67

65

0.508

17

Royals

68

64

0.515

18

D-backs

68

64

0.515

19

Yankees

70

63

0.526

20

Orioles

70

61

0.534

21

Indians

71

61

0.538

22

Reds

75

59

0.560

23

A's

75

57

0.568

24

Rays

75

56

0.573

25

Tigers

77

56

0.579

26

Pirates

77

55

0.583

27

Dodgers

78

55

0.586

28

Cardinals

78

55

0.586

29

Rangers

78

55

0.586

30

Red Sox

79

55

0.590

31

Braves

80

52

0.606

*Draft order is based on reverse order of the previous season's final regular season standings.

If the season ended today, the Houston Astros would have the No. 1 pick for the third consecutive year, a first since the Draft's inception in 1965. Houston took Carlos Correa, a high school shortstop from Puerto Rico, in the top spot in 2012, then followed that up with Stanford right-hander Mark Appel this year.

Any scouting staff will say it would rather not take top honors in this contest, since it's a sign of a lack of success at the big league level, but the Astros knew going into this summer what they should be looking for.

"We are aware of the standings and have kept an eye on them as we've attacked the summer circuit," Astros scouting director Mike Elias said. "Picking No. 1 is never something you want to be doing, but the reality is we're going to be picking high again in 2014."

The Miami Marlins would follow the Astros, based on the reverse order of the current standings. The Cubs, White Sox, Twins, Brewers, Giants, Mariners, Blue Jays and Mets would round out the top 10 selections. Toronto would pick again at No. 11, as compensation for failing to come to terms with 2013 first-round pick Phil Bickford.

With the completion of the summer season -- from high school showcases, All-America Games from coast to coast and college leagues -- most seem to feel the Class of 2014 is stronger and deeper than its most recent predecessor. High school pitching appears to be a strength of this crop, though there does seem to be a number of options among the other groups of prospects.

North Carolina State left-hander Carlos Rodon, a Golden Spikes Award finalist after his freshman year in 2012, is considered by many to be the early front-runner to be the No. 1 overall pick. Other potential top-of-the-first-round talents could be Rodon's teammate, speedy shortstop Trea Turner, East Carolina right-hander Jeff Hoffman, California high school shortstop Jacob Gatewood and fellow Californian prepster Alex Jackson, a catcher who can also play third and the outfield. Among that deep high school pitching crop, Texas right-hander Teddy Kolek, Georgia right-hander Dylan Cease and California lefty Brady Aiken stand out, though it should be noted that a high school righty has never been taken No. 1 overall.

"Our responsibility is to make the most of that Draft pick and all the ones after that first pick," Elias said. "We've been hitting the showcase circuits and the college leagues hard. It looks like it's going to be another strong Draft class. We are excited about following up on a lot of these guys in the spring."

Jonathan Mayo is a reporter for MLB.com and writes a blog, B3. Follow @JonathanMayoB3 on Twitter. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.